Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Waukesha Daily Freeman from Waukesha, Wisconsin • Page 7

Location:
Waukesha, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

State Paper Told to Get Rid of Property JANESVILLE, Wis. (UPI) The Janesville Press Gazette Tuesday was one of 16 newspapers in the nation ordered by the Federal Communications Commission to sell broadcast properties it owns. The Gazette owns WCLO-AM and WJVL-FM here as well as broadcast properties in West Bend and Huron, S.D. the FCC announced new rules prohibiting newspapers from acquiring radio or television stations in their circulation areas and said that newspaper and broadcast combinations in 16 cities, including Janesville, have to be broken up by Jan. 1, 1980.

The firm can either sell its radio or television station or its newspaper. IRS Checks on Potential Cheats WASHINGTON (UPI) the Internal Revenue Service computer spat out a name: Armstrong, John A. Then came a list of suspicious sounding documents: SA Johnson Re Gambling Mob Union Link in Nevada Loan Hoodlums Open Travel This is how the IRS, for the past year and a half, has kept track of thousands of citizens that agents suspect might become targets of tax investigation. Worried that the system may have been abused, the IRS suspended it. Officials insist the system was not operating secretly, that its files will not be destroyed and that it will again be operating as soon as new guidelines are issued.

The little-known Information Gathering and Retrieval System was set up in May, 1973, to collect information on persons who might be involved in tax law The word sets the system apart from the investigation of those already suspected or charged with tax law violations. Agents in many of the 58 district offices were assigned full-time to chasing down potential violators. A description of the system was published in the IRS Manual, a volume available for public inspection. The sample computer printout above was part of the manual, a guide to tax agents in preparing their reports. On Jan.

22, IRS Commissioner Donald C. Alexander temporarily halted IGRS. Officials say there were three reasons: worded guidelines led to confusion among agents over what material could be filed. The data is supposed to be but the manual says documents may include As one official said, could mean a lot of things to a lot of people. Fear of repeating the experience of the Special Services Staff, another IRS tory arm that compiled files on thousands of including congressmen and peace groups with the aid of computer lists supplied in 1969 and 1971 by the Justice Department.

The unit was scrapped last August and a spokesman concedes stuff it collected very useful and in retrospect easy to say we have done A trend toward giving the public greater access to government files, especially in cases where false information could damage reputations. Officials at IRS headquarters in Washington are taking sniff, a at some of the IGRS files, an official said. To date, any items in there that the spokesman added. The Philadelphia Bulletin reported the files included such items as drinking and sexual activities of local politicians. know a tax official countered, saying such information would be counter to the guidelines.

The spokesman said IGRS is to gangster-type such as news accounts of criminal actions for checking at tax time. who take payoffs often report them on their tax he said. The spokesman also said innocent items in the files can be misleading. a special agent reads a newspaper and sees a story about a bribery scandal in his town, going to clip it out. the kind of item going to go in the file.

suppose the story also goes into other aspects of his life. Is it reasonable to ask us to take scissors and cut this out? You know, you stick the whole clip There is no indication how long the IGRS suspension will last but the system will probably be revived, with its files intact. New Hampshire Race For Senate Undecided WASHINGTON (UPI) The Senate, voting along party lines, has decided 5834, to seat neither the Republican nor the Democratic candidate from New Hampshire in an election that took place Nov. 5 but is still too close to call. The votes have been counted and recounted twice, and in the latest count, Louis Wyman, the Republican, is ahead by 2 votes.

The Democratic Senate decided Tuesday not to seat Wyman or Democrat John Durkin until the Senate Rules Committee can investigate. not bitter at said Wyman. been around the track. I know what's going on Wyman is seeking a broad review of the Nov. 5 election results, hoping the final decision will be inconclusive and a runoff election will be needed.

Durkin said Tuesday a more limited inquiry of election results will determine the ultimate winner. It took a review of only 400 ballots in New Hampshire to strip Durkin of his 10-vote victory based on a recount by the dominated ballot commission after Wyman was declared the Election Day winner. Durkin said a review of as few as 50 protested ballots will determine that he won and is entitled to be seated as New junior senator. Wyman contended at least 3,500 ballots should be examined and possibly even malfunctioning voting machines and absentee ballots as well. He said if the Rules Committee inquiry is less complete than he wants it to be, a Supreme Court suit is possible.

Reds Shell Tankers Relieving Phnom Penh PHNOM PENH (UPI) Communist gunners shrugged off counterattacks by government aircraft and set fire to one of two fuel tankers trying to steam up the muddy Mekong River today, military sources said. The convoy, composed of at least two barges loaded with ammunition and two tankers, left South Vietnam earlier in the day on the hazardous 71-mile trip up the river to the Cambodian capital. The sources said the convoy was attacked soon after it crossed the border and one of the tankers was set ablaze. It was left behind with a small bodian navy escort only 11 miles inside Cambodia. The sources said the rest of the convoy continued up river and was reported three miles south of Neak Luong, about half-way, at mid-afternoon.

The sources refused to say if the ships were also carrying 'rice for residents of the refugee-swollen capital, where food stocks in government warehouses are down to one week. Phnom Penh, which depends on the Mekong River as one of its two vital lifelines, has not received a food supply by river since Christmas Eve. Storm Sweeps Out of Rockies By United Press A snowstorm swept out of the Rockies and into the Great Lakes region early today. Snow or freezing rain hit from the Dakotas to Minnesota and heavy snow warnings went up for South Dakota, Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan. Four inches of snow piled up at Aberdeen, S.D., and St.

Cloud, Minn. The storm left the West after dumping four inches of snow in Rawlins, and Cedar City, Utah. Travelers were warned against blowing snow in the Colorado mountains. Showers and thundershowers stretched from Illinois into Pennsylvania. MuggableMary Lives Up to Name NEW YORK (UPI) Muggable Mary certainly lives up to her name.

The gray-haired old lady has been ripped off 200 times in the last three years. The thieves usually grab her purse as she dozes on a lonely park bench or on the stoop of a seedy apartment building. Before they can make their getaway, however, Muggable Mary sticks a gun in their ribs. Det. Mary Glatzle of New York Street Crime Unit has made another got five hits one said the attractice brunette (the gray wig is a ploy).

January and February are dry periods. The muggers like the Like the three dozen other teams of the Street Crime Unit, Glatzle and her three male partners go to the parks and neighborhoods where assaults and muggings are on the rise. After they make a few arrests, word gets around the cops are in the area and the crooks lay low. have to make ourselves look like the she said. posted as drunks, priests, blind people, anything.

hobbled around on crutches, ridden a bike, even sat in a wheelchair. Her most successful technique, however, is just to sit with her head drooped. She appears to be asleep, but her eyes study the shoes that march past. I see are the Glatzle said. I see the same pair go back and forth, back and forth, I know So do her partners.

To many a surprise, that garage mechanic down the street, that confused tourist on the corner and that utility repairmen in the coffee shop have suddenly become a wall of cops behind him. get pretty dispirited when they see us all said Det. Joe Dean, one of the group. The others in the foursome are police officers Peter Martin and Lawrence Festa. They worked the Times Square area one of Man- record Real Estate Waukesha, 814 School Drive, sold by Verne A Osterndorf to John Holmes, $31,400.

814 School Drive, sold by John Holmes to James A Kuhlmeyer, $36,000. Lot 20, block Westowne Subdivision, sold by Agnes Kozel to Real Estate Investors Management, $5,500. Lot 48, block Westowne Subdivision, sold by Geral Thiel to Real Estate Investors Management, $6,000. Part of the northwest quarter of section 31. sold by Moorlamd Realty, Inc.

to Robert Schlytter, $2,500. 1211 Evergreen Drive, sold by Donald Ziolecki to David Wright, $33,900. Lot 106, Hillside Village Subdivision, Addition 2. sold by Harmony Homes, Inc. to JBJ Construction, $9,000.

1277-79 Sunsat Drive, sold by John Huber and Edward McNutt Jr. to John Faye, $64,500. 2443 Pendleton Place, sold by Donald Christiansen to James Riant, $51,500. Brookfield, Lot 6, block 2, Stonewood Subdivision, sold by Ronald Siepmann to Michael Beaupre, $16,000. Elm Grove, Lot 12, block 1, Saratoga Estates Subdivision, sold by John Faye to John Huber, $15,900.

Genesee Town, W329-S1580 Highway CC, sold by John Zierson Estate to Frederick Avery, $32,500. Pawaukee Town, N43-W27445 Highway JJ, sold by Walter Krupka to Charles A Goad $43,000. Oconomowoc Town, Lot 58, Misty Meadows Subdivision, Addition 1, sold by Five O's Development, Inc. to LeRoy Gennerman, $5,400. Merton Town, N63-W33959 Lakeview Drive, sold by LeRoy Bahr to Werner Maahs, $77,000.

Vernon Town, Lot 52, Sonoma Park Subdivision, sold by George Oleinik to Edwin Siebert, $8,000. Lisbon Town, Lot 52, Lynndale Farms East Subdivision, sold by Duane Strong to Donald Lange, $6,000. Lot 25, block 6, Beacon Hills Subdivision, Addition 1, sold by Zinky Realty Inc. to George Wojciga, $9,000. Fire Calls WAUKESHA Jan.

27 11:28 a.m., George DeLeon, 44, Madison sick, taken to hospital. 12:39 p.m., Ethel Gagan, 71, James fell, injury to leg. 2:10 p.m., Sally Klawes, 2, North fell, laceration to mouth. 9:59 p.m., Edna Mendenhall, 70, Carriage Drive, sick, taken to hospital. 10:09 p.m., Larry Carson, 26, Moreland fell, injury to leg.

Barbara Schneider, 19, Sheffield Drive, no occupation given, from Eugene Schneider, 26, Racine machinist. Accidents Divorces Licensed to Wed Raymond Lee, 23, Pabst Road, Oconomowoc and Gail Monreyra, 21, Pabst Road, Oconomowoc. James Naylor, 22, North Lake, Wl and Cheryl Turinske, 16, Hawthorne Drive, Hartland. Laurence LeBrasseur, 34, Apple Valley Lane, Menomonee Falls and Lois Nunnemacher, 26, Apple Valley Lane, Menomonee Falls. John Toson, 26, Shadybrook Place, Brookfield and Sandra Johnson, 25, Sunnyside Drive.

James Paulin, 36, Janesville Road, Muskego and Villwock, 21, Redman Drive, Muskego. Kenneth Johnson, 42. Ottawa Dousman and Dorothy Burnett, 36, Ottawa Dousman. Allen Krelwitz, 33, Fleetfoot Drive and Ingrid Martin, 25, Fleetfoot Drive. Divorces were granted in county court to: Arvilda Graves, 28, 167 New Berlin, secretary, from Arthur Graves, 31, Custer Milwaukee, lab technician.

Nancy Sajnog, 30, Josephine supervisor, from Richard Sajnog, 32, 42 Milwaukee, restaurant manager. Barbara George, 24, Ridgewood Drive, assembly line worker, from Harry George, 27, Madison laborer. John Bartsch, 22, Calhoun Road, Brookfield, sales, from Mary Bartsch, 20, Lilly Road, Brookfield, secretary. Bonnie Waldroup, 20, Astolat Drive, Brookfield, sales, from Jimmie Waldroup, 23, no address or occupation given. Stephanie Domnie, 26, Dover Drive, case aide, from Dennis Domnie, 27, Coronado salesman.

Sharon Pax, 34, Grand maintenance, from Clyde Pax, 48, Oconomowoc box 560, truck driver. WAUKESHA Jan 12:39 a.m., Madison St. at St. Paul Ave. Auto driven by Karen Sams, 20, Ervin Place, Sussex, proceeding north on St.

Paul collided with parked vehicle belonging to Jesse Guardarrama, North pushing Guardarrama auto into parked auto belonging to Pablo Cruz, St. Paul Ave. 1:15 p.m., 157 Bank St. Auto driven by Violet Dexter, 71, Richard backing from parking space, collided with parked vehicle belonging to John Becher, Anoka Ave. 2:48 p.m., Hartwell Ave.

at Main St. Collision between vehicles driven by Kathleen Sekey, 36, Joris going east on Main St. and Barbara George, 24, Ridgewood Drive, traveling north on Hartwell Ave. Jan. 26 2:57 a.m., City Lot No.

3. Unknown vehicle struck parked auto belonging to Linda Kornfehl, Main Sussex, causing Kornfehl auto to jump median and collide with parked vehicle belonging to Gail Schneck, Waukesha box 491. 9:26 a.m., Barstow St. at Wisconsin Ave. Collision between autos driven by Jeffery Nabarek, 19, Pheasant Pewaukee, heading south on Barstow St.

and Florence Roberts, 58, Chicago traveling east on Wisconsin Ave. 12:07 a.m., Hwy. A at Sunset Drive. Collision between vehicles driven by David Koceja, 20, Waterford Rt. 2, proceeding north on Hwy.

A and Gene Breest, 21, Teutonia Milwaukee proceeding from stop sign on Sunset Drive. Police Calls WAUKESHA Jan. 24 Mary Mondloch, Windsor Drive, reports that about 7:45 a.m. someone removed a bicycle from their garage. Ernst Schaefer, for One Stop Cleaning Center, Main reports that between 7:30 a.m.

Jan. 23 and 9:23 a.m. Jan. 24, two inspection glasses were broken in two dry cleaning machines. Jan.

25 Mrs. Harvey Leur, Waverly Place, reports that between the hours of 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. someone shot BB shots at the front windows at the above address. Julia Bestland, 232 Wilbur reports that a bicycle was removed from the garage at the above address.

Mrs. Nettie Jones, 646 Madison reports that between Jan. 21 and 10 a.m. Jan. 25, someone removed records and paper products from the basement at the above address.

Pamela Pillat, 221 College reports that someone removed a Tupperware demonstration kit from the basement at the above address. Inglobert Lenhard, 2401 Springdale Road, reports that between Jan. 10 and 10 p.m. Jan. 11, someone entered his auto and removed a tape player and an assortment of tapes.

It is also reported that a wallet containing $70 was removed from the Lenhard apartment. Marvin Peterson, 207 Moreland reports that between Dec. 20 and Jan. 26, someone entered the basement storage area and removed sports equipment and tires. Jan.

Bernard Mazer, for Kings Way Construction, reports that between the hourS of 5 p.m. Jan. 25 and 7 a.m. Jan. 26, someone broke a thermopane window on a house under construction at 1516 David Lane.

George Wagner, for Gun Shop, 413 Newhall reports that someone removed an automatic pistol from the showcase. Ronald Deig, Greendale Drive, Brookfield, reports that someone gained entry to his auto while it was parked in the lot at Sunset Bowl and removed his bowling equipment. Dale Sekely, Springdale Road, reports that about 3:30 a.m. as he was getting out of his auto, he was struck over the head. Currency was taken from his pocket and the keys to his auto.

NO" STILL CARES ABOUT New MADE SUITS AT READY MADE PRICES CUSTOM TAILORS WAUKESHA MR TWO DAYS: TK JAN. 19,30 VIRGINIA 23223 rM-Txdmwk GTt Syi.ww Incoipofittd PUT A NEW TV IN YOUR HOME TODAY FOR AS UTTU 88 SOLID STATE CONK IN TODAY Fri. til 9, Sat. til 4 1 I II mm" Across from StfMt WITH IMS AD 9000 FOR ANY NUMBCR IN PARTY Top Sirloin Mww UM M.VD THIS OFFER GOOD THRU TUESDAY, FEB. 4.

197S Ladies1 Top 2.85 cm Prkt $3JS PARTY toughest the other night. Glatzle, dressed in a dirty ski jacket, sat on a stoop. Martin, wearing a weathered gray overcoat, staggered up to a wall and swayed drunkenly. Dean and Festa went for a stroll. Nothing happened.

An hour later, the cops moved to another street. Glatzle took a break and sat in an unmarked police car to warm up. Martin bent over in what looked like drunken agony. A junkie appeared up the stree street and hugged himself, shivering. the decoy for another ticrime Glatzle said.

Minutes passed. Then Joe Cruse came along and spotted the camera strapped to arm. The temptation was too much. He grabbed it and bolted into that wall of cops. about Glatzle said, looking at her watch.

She sat next to the suspect on the way to the stationhouse and then got out to take him inside. went very she said. of the hits are a lot rougher. After she left, Festa shook his head in admiration. got more guts and hustle than some of the he said.

the Ill Justice Making Notes, Conversation WASHINGTON (UPI) Supreme Court Justice William Douglas is scribbling notes on a pad, talking with friends and continuing his steady improvement at Walter Reed Hospital. The CREATORS COOP 833 Gaspar Street Waukesha 547-9956 Mm "Distinct! va, Handcrafted Valentins Gifts" YOU ARE INVITED TO ATTEND A Film Presentation "A VISIT TO THE JOHN BIRCH SOCIETY" WHEN: Wednesday, January 29 0 PJM. Sponsored by: The Waukesha Chapter of The John Birch Society WHERE: Waukesha Admission Froo state Bank, 1 Community Room CLEARANCE SALE! FINAL 3 DAYS 10 50 selected items Everything in this CLEARANCE SALE is from our regular stock! Diamond Jewelry-gold Jewelry Fashion Jewelry-Pierced Earrings Watch Bands-Stone Rings-Watches Sterling Silver-Stainless-Crystal Silver Plated Holloware-Gifts Chlna-Pewter Open Monday and. ij Master Gnargo. Benk-AmaHeard, or Friday til 9 p.m.

American Express card. i ESTBERGS China Crystal Silver On the 5 Points Waukesha Freeman Wednesday, January 29, 1975 Page 7.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Waukesha Daily Freeman Archive

Pages Available:
147,442
Years Available:
1859-1977